Trump confirms mass deportation of immigrants

US President Donald Trump confirmed Friday that agents of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency will launch raids across the country this weekend to round up thousands of undocumented migrants for deportation.

“They came in illegally,” he told reporters at the White House. “They are going to take people out and they are going to send them back to their country.”

Trump said ICE would focus mainly on people with convictions, including gang members, but also others.

“It starts on Sunday and they’re going to take people out and they’re going to bring them back to their countries,” Trump told reporters at the White House.

“Or they’re going to take criminals out, put them in prison, or put them in prison in the countries they came from.”

While the focus will be on removing criminals, Trump said the raids would also target “people that came into our country, not through a process, that just walked over a line. They have to leave.

The ICE raids are expected to take place in 10 major cities, pursuing people for whom courts have already issued removal orders, according to media reports.

They could potentially target families who have been inside the United States for many years, with homes, businesses and US-born children, the reports said.

Migrant communities and immigration and rights activists around the country were girding for the raids.

Migrants were being told to not open their doors to ICE agents if they do not have search or arrest warrants, to record their encounters with agents, and to call immigration attorneys for help.

Democrats warned the Trump administration Thursday about breaking up long-resident families with members who are inside the country legally.

House leader Nancy Pelosi called the ICE plan “heartless” and said Sundays are when many Hispanic immigrant families are in church.

“These families are hardworking members of our communities and our country. This brutal action will terrorise children and tear families apart,” she told reporters.

“Many of these families are mixed-status families,” she added, referring to families who include members in the United States legally and illegally, such as migrants with children born inside the country.

According to the Pew Research Center, there are about 10.5 million undocumented migrants in the United States, and two-thirds have been in the country more than 10 years.

Ken Cuccinelli, acting director of US Citizenship and Immigration Services, said Wednesday that ICE has removal orders for some one million migrants, but added that it has nowhere near the manpower or facilities to arrest and deport that many.

Related Articles

After three stalemated elections, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his centrist rival Benny Gantz agreed Monday to form an emergency coalition government. The deal would end a year of political deadlock, in which none of the two political gladiators was able to form a government. Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud and Gantz’s Blue and White party […]

U.S. President Donald Trump on Sunday told the public to stop panic-buying food and other supplies amid the coronavirus crisis, as his response to the outbreak came under fire. “You don’t have to buy so much. Just relax,” he said at a White House news conference. He said he spoke to retail executives, whose message […]

U.S. President Donald Trump in the most blistering attack till date, blasted Robert Mueller’s probe of Russian meddling in US election, and said the investigators have gone “totally nuts” and are a “disgrace.” “A TOTAL WITCH HUNT LIKE NO OTHER IN AMERICAN HISTORY!” he wrote. The diatribe came amid claims that a nervous Trump is […]